Why General Motors Is Feeling Good About 2018 -- and Even Better About 2019

General Motors (NYSE: GM) said that it expects its results in 2018 to look a lot like its pre-tax 2017 results -- and that those pre-tax 2017 results will end up "at the high end" of the optimistic guidance it gave a year ago.

GM also noted that while its earnings may not grow much in 2018, 2019 has the potential to be a record year.

A wine-red 2018 Chevrolet Traverse, a seven-passenger crossover SUV.
A wine-red 2018 Chevrolet Traverse, a seven-passenger crossover SUV.

GM's all-new line of crossover SUVs helped boost profits in 2017. Models like the Chevrolet Traverse, introduced last fall, should help GM offset profit headwinds in 2018. Image source: General Motors.

A good operating result for 2017

GM won't report its fourth-quarter and full-year 2017 earnings until Feb. 5. But in a briefing on Tuesday, GM executives gave investors a preview: They said that the company's 2017 pre-tax earnings will come in at the "high end" of the range it had forecast at the beginning of 2017, $6 to $6.50 per share.

That should be an all-time profit record for GM, its third in a row, and a little better than GM had previously expected. During GM's third-quarter 2017 earnings report, CFO Chuck Stevens said that GM expected its full-year earnings to land in the middle of that range. But, GM noted, its after-tax 2017 results will be impacted by a $7 billion one-time item, an accounting charge related to the new tax-code changes.

As for other metrics like revenue, operating margins in North America, and cash returned to shareholders, Stevens said that GM will meet all of the upbeat guidance it gave early in the year, with the possible exception of free cash flow.

A presentation slide that lists the key points of GM's 2017 guidance and notes that it met all of them with the possible exception of free cash flow.
A presentation slide that lists the key points of GM's 2017 guidance and notes that it met all of them with the possible exception of free cash flow.

Image source: General Motors.

There's a good explanation for the cash flow miss, as Stevens explained:

It does look like we could come up short on our free cash flow target, but that's primarily due to reduced production -- lower production in order to balance supply and demand and rightsize inventory and end the year down 90,000 units. Despite that, we still returned about $7 billion to shareholders in 2017.

GM cut production at several of its North American factories in the third quarter in an effort to bring U.S. inventories of some slow-selling models under control. It worked -- GM ended the year with a very reasonable 63 days' supply of vehicles in inventory in the United States. But because GM shipped fewer vehicles than it had expected, cash flow will be down.

About that $7 billion one-time charge

GM said that it will take a one-time charge of $7 billion against its fourth-quarter earnings. That sounds worrisome, but note: It's due to an accounting change. It's not something that will affect GM's cash levels.